US officially enters recession


The US recession, which observers worldwide have predicted for months, has
officially
begun.
The National Bureau of Economic Research, an official panel of senior
economists, has
declared that the US entered recession in March this year.



We will do everything we can to enhance a recovery

President George W Bush
Since then, the decline in the US economy has been further undermined by the
11
September terrorist attacks on Washington and New York.

The US economy has suffered 10 recessions since the end of World War II, the
last of
which was in March 1991.

The past 10 years of economic growth have been the longest period of
expansion in US
history, the NBER said.

July recovery

But the US economy is likely to recover by July 2002 according to
information on
previous post-war recessions, NBER committee member Ben Bernanke said.

"Based on past experience, we expect the turnaround to begin anytime from
now until
July," Mr Bernanke told the BBC's World Business Report.

NBER's measures of a recession
Employment
Income
Industrial output
Wholesale sales
Retail sales
The last US recession stretched from the middle of 1990 to March 1991 after
which the
record period of expansion began.

The NBER scrutinises monthly figures for employment, income, industrial
output and
wholesale and retail trade.

Other economists technically define a recession as a six month period of
negative
growth.

Senate action needed

"We will do everything we can to enhance a recovery," said President George
W Bush,
whose father lost the White House partly as a result of the last US
recession.

The White House on Monday renewed its appeal for the Senate to pass an
economic
stimulus plan.



Failure to act in the Senate risks prolonging a recession

White House spokesman
Speaking shortly before the NBER's official announcement, White House
spokesman Ari
Fleischer said:

"The Senate needs to act so that the economy can recover. Failure to act in
the Senate
risks prolonging a recession."

The news came on the same day as US retail sales over the holiday period
gave some
cause for renewed optimism about the economy's health.

The American economy is heading for a recovery, said Treasury Secretary Paul
O'Neill.

"That's a measure of the past... what matters is going forward," Mr O'Neill
said when
asked about the NBER's statement on a recession.

Share reaction

But some analysts say the US economy will show negative growth of 1.5%
between October
and December.



That's a measure of the past ... what matters now is going forward

Paul O'Neill
US Treasury Secretary
And the government is due to revise its estimate of Gross Domestic Product
(GDP)
between July and September on Friday, with some expecting a downward
revision to -1%
from -0.4%.


US shares fell into the red from their early gains after the NBER
announcement.

But the falls were cushioned by rising expectations of a stimulus package
and the
positive news from the retail sector.

And the Dow Jones Industrial Average of leading US shares pulled itself back
into
positive territory to close 23 points higher at 9,983.


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